I was checking Kickstarter today and found this: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/land-boards/pisoc?ref=home_recs.
The project incorporates PSOC 5LP from Cypress on a custom hat. What do you think?
I was checking Kickstarter today and found this: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/land-boards/pisoc?ref=home_recs.
The project incorporates PSOC 5LP from Cypress on a custom hat. What do you think?
What other hat is there for the Raspberry Pi that has a PSOC?
The PiSoC for example? https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/embeditelectronics/pisoc-learn-to-create?ref=users
Not exactly a HAT, but does connect to the Pi via GPIO header and is Arduino shield compatible.
Backed for $49, including MiniProg3.
Yes, I saw the PiSOC as I was getting ready to launch. Nice idea and I really like the classroom aspect. Any card like these cards would be great in a University electronics program.
Still, not a hat. Externally cabled. Same general price range. To me it validates my approach of making a hat instead of an external card. This one really suffers the criticism that it could be replaced with the dev board for $10. After all, this is for a bench.
I spent a great deal of effort to eliminate the extra programmer. Fact is if I trusted the supply of dev kits I probably would not have chosen to get the programming from the Pi working. My concern was that if I got a few hundred backers I would have trouble getting the dev kits to use the programmer part. Plus, they are not without problems including cable length limits. And you've got a messy programmer with exposed pins, etc.
What I really don't understand with a board like this is the poor provision for mounting. Fine for top of the table playing around but not all that great for deployment in a real device. Again, targeted at a school situation but not even great there since I don't want my dev card sitting on a bench.
Also, their campaign raised an impressive $16K but their fulfillment was significantly flawed. They listed Oct 2015 as the estimated delivery date. Look at their updates. They shipped in May 2016. They were a victim of their own numbers. Not enough to quit their day job but too much to fulfill their commitment.
I've got mine set up significantly different with a history to back me up. We will ship the first 50 boards in July and the next batch in August. Probably early in August but it depends on how many backers come in on the last two weeks.
Thanks for backing Kickstarter projects. Even if they are not mine.
Doug at Land Boards, LLC
Interesting project. Did you get the plus version? Would love to hear more on this when you get it.
Clem
This one really suffers the criticism that it could be replaced with the dev board for $10. After all, this is for a bench.
I disagree, and would rather call it flexible:
I don't understand the "I don't want my dev card sitting on a bench" argument. It's not hard to design an enclosure which can be good looking and functional. And, even though you may not want it, it could sit on a desk. The only difference is that there will be a Pi attached to it.
Also, their campaign raised an impressive $16K but their fulfillment was significantly flawed. They listed Oct 2015 as the estimated delivery date. Look at their updates. They shipped in May 2016. They were a victim of their own numbers. Not enough to quit their day job but too much to fulfill their commitment.
As for the delays: they happen, on plenty of hardware projects, and I don't mind. I backed the idea, wanting to help these guys achieve their goal. They may not have your experience, seen that you have created 20 campaigns, but I'm sure they have learned quite a lot. Perhaps they realised this is not what they want to keep doing, or maybe they will be using that experience for a new project and campaign where things will go better. It's Kickstarter, and I have seen projects do far worse than this. How were your first campaigns? You have to start somewhere in order to be able to learn and gain experience.
Good luck with your campaign, it seems to be going well.
Yes, the $49 perk, PiSoC+ with MiniProg3. I plan on using it in the Pi IoT challenge
That was good value, if the MiniProg3 is included too.
Yes it was, only for early birds though.
(commenting on the pricing alone)
I think it's fair for Dough to ask a price that makes the operation viable. We shouldn't have to work for virtually nothing per hour.
The ones that can make kits, shield, hats, boosterpacks, capes, wings for $10 typically have marketing budget poured into the mix to make the prices that low.
Cypress DevKit , Gecko board, LaunchPad, ST Nucleo: can you build them for that price? Why then ask someone else without a marketing machine to do that?
A person that uses his brains and hands deserves a return.
For what it's worth. ..
I agree it is good to ask a fair price, but I still feel this is relying on backers not realizing they can get near-equivalent functionality (actually a higher performance part) for 1/5th of the cost.
The value-add appears to be HAT form-factor, is that worth the additional $45 is what feels uncomfortable.
Hobbyists benefit from the ultra-low cost dev-boards that Cypress have made available. I'm sure Cypress have no issue losing a bit of money on 54 backers purchasing their dev-boards.
I feel uncomfortable ripping off fellow hobbyists.
I get that everyone has different perception of value so of course this is just a personal opinion.
In good spirit:
> I'm sure Cypress have no issue losing a bit of money on 54 backers purchasing their dev-boards.
They'd be happy. I think their goal is to sell PSoCs, not to sell devboards (those, I believe, are marketing material, not a commercial product).
> I feel uncomfortable ripping off fellow hobbyists.
There I beg to differ. I think the asking price is in line with what the components + pcb + mail charge cost, and a little for the time spent designing and building the boards at home.
I guess if we would calculate what's left in Dough's hand per hour worked - if we divide his gain by the time spent designing, softwareing, ordering parts, soldering, testing, packing and mailing,
it's close to $0.0 / hour.
Whether this is a hat worth purchasing, that's a different discussion. I'd say no on that. That doesn't make it a rip-off though.